4/1: Elusive Mississippians show distrust of census
New York Times: Elusive Mississippians show distrust of census
As the deadline for returning census forms hits today, the difficulty of getting
census forms returned is highlighted. In Mississippi's Issaquena County, only 21% of residents have returned their forms, compared with 52% nationally.
The county and entire Delta area is plagued by poverty and illiteracy. People misstrust census takers for a variety of reasons, including a belief that the government is trying to catch them doing something illegal like misrepresenting the number of people in their household, which could impact benefits such as food stamps.
In the last census, the numbers showed there was one person per 116-acres in Issaquena County.
Also in the South:
ALABAMA: Bill to end grocery tax hits state legislature
ARKANSAS: Researcher says state's way of identifying grade inflation is flawed
FLORIDA: Offshore oil drilling plan spares South Florida
GEORGIA: Study shows small soda taxes don't impact obesity
KENTUCKY: Gov. Beshear says more jobs are coming to the state
LOUISIANA: Black Caucus to fight lawsuit challenging health care reform law
MISSISSIPPI: Opinion: Budget -- Avoid 'irrational exuberance'
NORTH CAROLINA: Offshore oil drilling will include North Carolina coast
SOUTH CAROLINA: Senate approves 50-cent increase on cigarette tax
TENNESSEE: Tennessee Health Freedom Act passes key vote in legislature
VIRGINIA: State lags behind others in census response
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Labels: budget, caucus, census, cigarette tax, health, jobs, oil drilling

